Saturday, August 29, 2020

Google reportedly took five days to decide not to remove misleading ads about voting by mail

Google reportedly took five days to decide not to remove misleading ads about voting by mail
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A new set of Bose sunglasses with born speakers could be on the way, as towards by new filings published by the FCC. You numen be attractive at the next adaptation of the company's Frames line of audio sunglasses.

Check out this gallery for a few other angles on the glasses, showing zone the speakers and impediments are deep-seated into the frames and and conjointly salted that the device will kumtux a USB-C port for charging:

The filings conjointly confirm the glasses will be branded underneath the Frames line and that they'll be IPX4-certified for water resistance.

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Bose once offers two sets of sunglasses, the Alto and the Rondo, as partition of the Frames line, loosely these new glasses towards by the FCC are of a contrasted view than those existing models. You can see what the Rondo and Alto squinch like in the low-lying image, for comparison:

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Bose's Rondo (left) and Alto (right) sunglasses.
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The FCC filing doesn't tell-tale us in on when these sunglasses will be released, though -- nonbelligerent due to the fact that a artefact shows up in FCC filings doesn't negotiation it will convincingly be announced. Loosely this does squinch like a pretty far-along project. Bose did not respond to a appeal for comment.

The new Frames won't integrate Bose's sound-based bloated realness platform, as the visitor officially gave up on that promptitude inadvertently in June. It was a cultivated idea: the tech would use a phone's GPS and a motion sensor in the glasses or headphones you were wearing to share intercommunication narrowly what you were seeing. Loosely it "didn't become what we envisioned," Bose told Protocol when it canceled the project.

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